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When I use Alt+NumBlock and a.m. number it does not work, neither with U nor without. If you really need the shortcut then either you consult the following article or wait until an other expert gives you the answer.

So my suggestion is to
- check if the font of the actual text allows wu's (unicode number or insert symbol)
- if no, find/choose another font where the wu is defined and change the font if the existing font doesn't allow wu's
- insert the wu's thanks to unicode numbers or insert/symbol.

So my suggestion is to
- check if the font of the actual text allows wu's (unicode number or insert symbol)
- if no, find/choose another font where the wu is defined and change the font if the existing font doesn't allow wu's
- insert the wu's thanks to unicode numbers or insert/symbol.

Afterwards, I tried to change the font (via toolbar) of a selected paragraph containing the inserted wu, and I saw if I get a wu or not.

It seems my home's Word has another font list in Insert/Symbol... I don't know what parameter explains the difference with my office's Word.
At least, both have the interesting "(normal text)" which correspond to the characters inserted by the keyboard.

I was pursuing this for my sister-in-law who is doing geneology work with some Polish background.

Although this font stuff works for me on my laptop, she does not see any Latin subsets when using the above insert|symbol, select (normal text) approach.

We've gone back to the windows set up and added International support, but still nothing.

Is there a possibility that her system does not have a full font set? Does Win98 (this is an upgrade from Win95 by the way) come with fonts that don't include Latin?

I sent her a note to add a Polish keyboard and use the ;: keys for the wu and I'm going to see if that works (vs. the insert|symbol approach).

I'm just curious. The fact is that she has a Compaq that came with Win95 and I upgraded to Win98. I did not do a re-install because Compaq systems do not come with separate device driver disks and it doesn't seem possible to just do a vanilla install on their systems (they're not my favorite vendor).

With the font she has now, suggest her to :
* select Insert/symbol (on the menus)
* select font = (normal text)
* if there is a vertical scroll bar at the right of the characters table, drag it to the top
* click once to the upper left cell of the cell
* type 9 times on the down arrow
* 3 times the right arrow.

If she didn't reach an uppercase wu, that letter has not been designed by the autor of the font she uses as default in her text.
In that case, she has to choose another font.

Unfortunately, after selecting the (normal text) there was no scrollbar on the characters table. That's why I'm suspicious of the fonts. She did this while having the cursor in the middle of a Times New Roman word (which is what I did).

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